Aktuelle Entwicklungenbei AI-Regulierung
(Dieses Bild wurde mit AI generiert)
MLex ist ein führender unabhängiger Nachrichtenanbieter für globale Einblicke, Analysen und Berichte zu vielen Fachgebieten. Ein weltweites Netzwerk an Fachjournalist:innen und Redakteur:innen sorgt dafür, dass Sie als Erste:r auf Chancen und Bedrohungen für Ihr Unternehmen und Ihre Kund:innen reagieren können. Dank personalisierter Benachrichtigungen, thematischer Suchfilter und der Verfügbarkeit detaillierter Dossiers für bestimmte Fälle sind Sie mit MLex den Vorschriften immer einen Schritt voraus. Werfen Sie jetzt einen kostenfreien Blick auf MLex.
Ein aktuelles Best-Of von MLex zum Thema AI-Regulierung:
EU asks Denmark to revise deepfake draft law
The European Commission has called for Denmark to revise its planned copyright reform to tackle deepfakes because it says it risks breaching EU rules, expanding platform liability and becoming out of step with the bloc’s artificial intelligence law. The EU executive has also questioned whether intellectual property law is the appropriate tool for protecting personal characteristics in AI-generated imitations. (Weiterlesen)
India’s new IT rules put platforms on proactive AI-policing duty
With just a week remaining before new rules in India take effect, online platforms are scrambling to determine whether they have sufficient time to prepare for what many view as a fundamental regulatory shift, as the Indian government tightens its grip on artificial intelligence. (Weiterlesen)
China cracks down on unlabeled AI content on Weibo, Douyin
China’s internet regulator has ordered digital platforms to remove more than 13,000 social-media accounts and 543,000 pieces of content for failing to label artificial intelligence-generated material, in the first major enforcement action disclosed since Beijing mandated such identification. The crackdown targeted content across major Chinese platforms including Weibo, Douyin, Kuaishou, Bilibili and WeChat. (Weiterlesen)
EU Lawmakers push voluntary deals.
EU lawmakers are backing voluntary AI licensing deals in a non-binding report on copyright and generative AI, signaling how creators should be paid as the European Commission prepares a broader copyright review later this year. (Weiterlesen)
Generative AI developers to see EU lawmakers call for extraterritorial copyright
EU lawmakers are preparing to call for EU copyright laws to apply extraterritorially to generative AI systems, meaning AI models trained outside the bloc would still need to comply with EU copyright rules to access its market. The draft also seeks mandatory transparency on training data and a shift from the current “opt-out” system for rights holders. (Weiterlesen)